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News

A firefighter looks on as homes burn in Northern California’s Camp Fire earlier in November 2018.
Posted inNews

Communities of Color Are More Vulnerable to Wildfires

Ilima Loomis, Science Writer by Ilima Loomis 29 November 201827 October 2022

Affluent white people are more likely to live in fire-prone areas, but race and socioeconomic vulnerability can put minority communities at greater risk, a new study finds.

Emissions from the Navajo Generating Station, a coal-fired powerplant located in Arizona
Posted inNews

Bipartisan Legislation Would Put a Price on Carbon

by Randy Showstack 28 November 20187 April 2023

A bill introduced in Congress yesterday could help cut U.S. carbon pollution by 40% in 10 years.

The amphitheater of the ancient Roman city of Aventicum, in the Swiss town of Avenches
Posted inNews

Ancient Romans Polluted Their Lakes Just Like We Do Today

Lucas Joel by L. Joel 28 November 20182 November 2021

Sediments from a lake in Switzerland reveal that ancient Romans triggered dead zones caused by the runoff of nutrients. Sound familiar?

Posted inNews

Groups Gear Up to Fight Oil and Gas Development in Arctic Refuge

by Randy Showstack 28 November 201827 March 2023

With Democrats controlling the House of Representatives beginning in January, advocates see an opportunity to try to protect the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge from oil and gas development.

Jean Dickey at retirement party
Posted inNews

Jean O’Brien Dickey (1945–2018)

by V. Zlotnicki and S. Owen 26 November 201828 October 2021

This pioneer in space geodesy started as a particle physicist and went on to unravel relationships between Earth’s rotation and climate processes.

Artist’s impression of asteroids about to impact Greenland
Posted inNews

Enormous Impact Crater Spotted in Greenland Under Glacial Ice

Katherine Kornei, Science Writer by Katherine Kornei 20 November 20181 October 2021

Ice-penetrating radar revealed a 31-kilometer impact crater—one of the world’s largest—in northwestern Greenland that might have been formed fewer than 20,000 years ago.

Spotted seatrout.
Posted inNews

Fish Continued to Spawn as Hurricane Harvey Swirled Overhead

Jenessa Duncombe, Staff Writer by Jenessa Duncombe 19 November 201818 March 2022

Spotted seatrout, one of the most popular fish to catch on the shores of Texas, carried on their nightly baby-making ritual despite the havoc of a category 4 storm above.

Smokestacks emit thick plumes of pollution that include black carbon.
Posted inNews

Black Carbon Not the Primary Cause of Historic Glacial Retreat

Katherine Kornei, Science Writer by Katherine Kornei 16 November 201818 November 2022

Ice cores and glacial records reveal that European glaciers retreated before the rise of industrialization in the 1870s, suggesting that soot deposition did not primarily drive the shift.

An engineer maintains solar panel equipment on a factory roof.
Posted inNews

World off Course to Meet Emissions Reduction Goals

by Randy Showstack 15 November 201828 February 2023

A new energy report shows a disconnect between scientific research targets and what is happening in the energy markets.

This lagoon appeared in 2017 in Chile’s Atacama Desert and evaporated months later.
Posted inNews

Atacama Desert’s Unprecedented Rains Are Lethal to Microbes

Katherine Kornei, Science Writer by Katherine Kornei 12 November 201812 April 2022

Rainfall in the driest parts of Chile’s Atacama Desert in 2017 resulted in hypersaline lagoons that killed the majority of microbes adapted to millions of years of arid conditions.

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